Chesterfield County Landlord Guide: Cheraw, Pageland, and SC Landlord-Tenant Law
Chesterfield County sits in the northeastern corner of South Carolina where the Sandhills meet the Pee Dee, a county whose two largest communities β Cheraw and Pageland β have distinct economic and cultural characters that shape their respective rental markets. Cheraw’s historic grace and tourism profile attract a different tenant segment than Pageland’s agricultural workforce. Both are governed by the same South Carolina landlord-tenant statute, and both rely on Chesterfield County Magistrate Court for eviction proceedings. Understanding the county’s submarket dynamics helps landlords position their properties and manage tenancies effectively.
Eviction Law in Chesterfield County
Nonpayment evictions begin with a written 5-Day Notice to Pay or Vacate under SC Code Β§ 27-40-710. After five days without resolution, Summary Ejectment is filed at Chesterfield County Magistrate Court in Chesterfield. The filing fee is $80β$120; a hearing is set within 10 days; a successful case produces a Writ of Ejectment enforced by the Chesterfield County Sheriff. Lease violation evictions proceed on 14-day notice under SC Code Β§ 27-40-720. The statutory requirements are identical across all SC counties β a landlord who skips written notice or attempts self-help eviction faces dismissal or civil liability, regardless of how egregious the tenant’s conduct.
Cheraw: Historic Character and the Lifestyle Rental Market
Cheraw has one of South Carolina’s best-preserved historic districts β a remarkable collection of antebellum architecture along its tree-lined main corridor that has drawn comparisons to much larger SC historic towns. The town’s cultural identity, anchored by its claim as Dizzy Gillespie’s birthplace and its active arts scene, has attracted a modest but genuine wave of retirees, remote workers, and lifestyle seekers who are discovering Cheraw’s affordability relative to comparable historic small cities in the Carolinas. For landlords with quality historic-district properties, this trend creates an opportunity to capture tenants at the higher end of Chesterfield County’s rent range β tenants who are choosing Cheraw for its character and will pay a premium to be in the most desirable neighborhoods.
Historic-district landlords should be aware that the Town of Cheraw maintains historic preservation review requirements for exterior modifications β changes to facades, windows, doors, and other character-defining features may require local approval before work begins. This is not a landlord-tenant law issue per se, but it is a property management reality that affects renovation and maintenance planning. Violations of historic district standards can generate fines and remediation requirements that exceed the cost of getting advance approval.
Pageland and Agricultural Market Realities
Pageland is known as the Watermelon Capital of the World and is also a significant peach-producing area with food processing and agricultural employment that draws both year-round and seasonal workers. The rental market in and around Pageland reflects this agricultural character β working-class households, modest rents, and some seasonal demand from agricultural workers who need short-term housing during harvest periods. SC’s Residential Landlord and Tenant Act applies to all residential tenancies, including short-term ones; landlords who provide seasonal worker housing must use written leases with clear term dates, follow the deposit return timeline, and comply with habitability standards regardless of tenancy length.
Habitability and Older Stock Maintenance
Chesterfield County’s rental housing stock is predominantly older, particularly in Cheraw where the historic character of the housing is both an asset and a maintenance responsibility. SC Code Β§ 27-40-410’s habitability requirements apply uniformly: functional HVAC, working plumbing, weathertight roof and walls, and safe electrical service are minimum legal obligations regardless of rent level or property age. In historic properties, these systems are often aging and require more frequent attention β a furnace in a 1920s Cheraw bungalow may be approaching end of useful life, and the cost of emergency replacement mid-winter is far greater than the cost of proactive assessment and planned replacement during the off-season. Document all maintenance work in writing, respond to tenant repair requests promptly, and maintain records that demonstrate good-faith habitability compliance throughout the tenancy.
Security Deposits and Compliance
Chesterfield County’s modest rents mean deposits are typically $400β$700 for most residential units. SC Code Β§ 27-40-530 requires return of the unused portion within 30 days of lease termination and possession surrender with itemized accounting. The process discipline required β move-in documentation, prompt move-out inspection, timely repair quotes, accounting letter issued well before the deadline β is no different here than anywhere else in SC. Landlords who build this process into their standard lease-end workflow, regardless of deposit size, protect themselves against disputes that are disproportionately disruptive relative to the sums at stake.
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